RICHMOND, VA – Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections (RITE) has filed a brief with the Supreme Court of Virginia asking it to strike down the Virginia General Assembly’s unconstitutionally adopted ballot referendum that, if approved, would amend the state constitution to permit mid-decade partisan gerrymandering.
The case,McDougle v. Nardo, challenges the General Assembly’s eleventh-hour legislation to place a constitutional amendment before voters in an unusual April special election. If approved, the amendment would allow the Democrat-controlled legislature to draw a mid-decade, highly partisan gerrymander. Although a lower court ruled that the legislation was unconstitutional, the Virginia Supreme Court has permitted the April 21 referendum to continue while it considers the legal challenges.
The General Assembly violated the state constitution in multiple ways when enacting the measure. RITE’s brief focuses on a critical violation: the Virginia Constitution requires an intervening House of Delegates election between the two legislative passages necessary to refer a constitutional amendment to voters. This intervening-election requirement appears in many state constitutions and ensures that voters can consider a candidate’s vote on a proposed constitutional amendment when deciding whether to vote for that candidate. Yet the General Assembly passed the measure on October 31, while the 2025 General Election was already underway and a significant percentage of Virginians had already cast their ballots.
“Virginia Democrats engaged in a shameless and unconstitutional power grab that undermines the will of the voters,” said RITE President and CEO Justin Riemer. “The Virginia Supreme Court must uphold the constitutional protections ensuring full citizen participation in the referendum process by declaring the proposed gerrymandering amendment invalid. In the meantime, RITE strongly encourages Virginians to vote ’no’ on April 21.”